Surrealist Art and Writing, 1919–1939
Surrealist Art and Writing offers a fresh analysis of Surrealism, the avant-garde movement that, in its search for contemporary lyricism and imagery, united literature and art to politics and psychology. Examining Surrealism's main phases from a variety of perspectives, Jack Spector emphasises the rebellion of the protagonists against their middle-class education. In Manifestos and Manifestations the Surrealists promoted Marxist over liberal politics; Freudian psychoanalysis over French psychiatry; Hegelian dialectics over Cartesian logic; and the outmoded, psychotic, or childish over modernist art. This study offers a coherent overview of the exciting and important interwar period in Europe. In particular it places avant-garde ideas and imagery within the historical and political contexts of the 1920s and 30s, integrating them into contemporary artistic and ideological currents.
- Coherent overview of exciting period in Europe between the wars
- Fresh approach - addressing several contemporary theoretical approaches
- Jargon-free, comprehensible writing
Product details
May 1999Paperback
9780521657396
332 pages
253 × 178 × 18 mm
0.81kg
22 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Breaking the institutional codes: revolution in the classroom
- 3. The politics of dream and the dream of politics
- 4. In the service of which revolution? An aborted incarnation of the dream: Marxism and Surrealism
- 5. Surrealism and painting (The ineffable)
- 6. The Surrealist woman and the colonial other.